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Takadagawa stable

Coordinates: 35°41′00″N 139°47′46″E / 35.6833°N 139.7961°E / 35.6833; 139.7961
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Takadagawa stable (高田川部屋, Takadagawa-beya) is a stable of sumo wrestlers, one of the Nishonoseki ichimon or group of stables. It was formed in 1974 by former ōzeki Maenoyama, and was originally in the Takasago group of stables before joining the Nishonoseki ichimon. A series of wrestlers from Taiwan were recruited in the late 1980s. Later a Mongolian, Maenoyu, was at the stable from 2004 until 2007, but there have been no foreigners recruited since Maenoyu's retirement and the current stablemaster has indicated there are no plans to do in the immediate future.[1] As of January 2023, it had 19 wrestlers.

Takadagawa stable is home to the 38th Kimura Shōnosuke[broken anchor], the current chief sumo referee.

History

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In 1998, the Japan Sumo Association board election nominated Takadagawa as trustee. However, he did not follow the Takasago clan's candidacy and ran for office by himself, causing a dispute. Takadagawa was excommunicated from the ichimon and the stable became independent. As he was approaching the mandatory retirement age, Maenoyama handed over control to Futagoyama stable's former sekiwake Akinoshima in 2009, as Akinoshima had dissension with the head coach at his stable. In 2011, the stable joined the Nishonoseki ichimon ending nearly thirteen years of non-alignment with an ichimon.[2]

The stable did not have any sekitori between Dairaidō′s last appearance in jūryō in July 2006 and the promotion of Ryūden in September 2012, where he lasted for only one tournament before reaching sekitoriship again in November 2016. In September 2014 Kagayaki reached jūryō, ending Takadagawa's sekitori drought. Kagayaki went on to reach the top makuuchi division in January 2016, the first Takadagawa wrestler to do so since Kenkō in 1992. Ryūden then reached the top division himself in January 2018.

On 10 April 2020, the Sumo Association announced that an undisclosed wrestler had tested positive for the coronavirus. It was later confirmed to be Shobushi of Takadagawa Stable, a sandanme wrestler who died from coronavirus complications on 13 May 2020.[3] It had also been announced in late April 2020 that seven individuals, including Takadagawa's stablemaster and jūryō wrestler Hakuyozan, were hospitalized after testing positive for the virus.[4] The stable was only one of the 45 stables in sumo not included in the "all-clear" antibody test results issued by the Sumo Association on 6 July 2020.[5] The tate-gyōji at the stable, Shikimori Inosuke, missed the July 2020 tournament with an unspecified illness.

Ring name conventions

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Some wrestlers at this stable have taken ring names or shikona that begin with the characters 安芸 (read: aki), in deference to their coach and the stable's owner, the former Akinoshima. Examples as of 2017 include Akinohana and Akinoyama.

Owners

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Notable active wrestlers

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Coach

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Assistant

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Notable former members

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Referee

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  • 38th Kimura Shōnosuke (tate-gyōji, real name Hideki Imaoka)
  • Kimura Mitsunosuke (jūryō-gyōji, real name Makoto Kawahara)
  • Shikimori Tatsunosuke (sandanme-gyōji, real name Keisuke Mizutani)

Hairdresser

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Location and access

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Tokyo, Kōtō ward, Kiyosumi 2-15-7
2 minute walk from Kiyosumi-shirakawa Station on the Ōedo Line and Hanzōmon Line

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Gunning, John (18 March 2020). "Akinoshima had decorated career as part of sumo's dominant stable". Japan Times. Retrieved 19 March 2020.
  2. ^ "「無所属」高田川部屋が二所一門へ". Nikkan Sports. 14 January 2011. Retrieved 28 September 2022.
  3. ^ "28-year-old sumo wrestler dies after coronavirus infection". english.kyodonews.net. Kyodo. 13 May 2020. Retrieved 13 May 2020.
  4. ^ "Sumo stablemaster, 5 wrestlers contract new coronavirus". english.kyodonews.net. Kyodo. 25 April 2020. Retrieved 25 April 2020.
  5. ^ "JSA says membership free of coronavirus after tests". Japan Times. 7 July 2020. Retrieved 23 July 2020.
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35°41′00″N 139°47′46″E / 35.6833°N 139.7961°E / 35.6833; 139.7961